LUTHERANS OF WORLD TO MEET Will Discuss Needs of the Lutheran Church in Europe Xew York, Dec. 23.—A call has been issued for a world conference of Lutherans to be held in America next year. The action of the Na tional Lutheran Council, which is sued the call./ls based on the reports of the commissioners of the Luth eran Church of America that have been in Europe for the past six months surveying conditions. The purpose of the conference is Find the Light in the Dark ®Rndhnii Indicator No more groping 1 n "he dark for chain or push button to turn on elec tric or gos "SEKLIi i-.S" show "up in the ! pitch darkness and guide you -o ! the real light. Radloin Pendants for Pall Chains Radium Tacks for (Vnll Sivitrhrs 25c 1 for gl.oo Mailed Postpaid Everywhere ! P. S. LEWIS, Distributor •S3 Commercial Trust Building Philadelphia. Pa. The Reliable Shop For PURE Christmas Candies ROSE'S Second at Walnut St. Page & Shaw Whitman's Sampler Maillard's Foss Quality Fancy Packages Assorted Hard Candies Salted Almonds Salted Pecans Fruit Cake and Other Assorted Christmas Cakes THE GLOBE All Christmas Saving Fund Checks Cashed THE GLOBE Store open every evening until Christmas. We've increased our salesforce to render prompt and courteous service to the great crowds of last minute shoppers. Father— Brother— All Will Appreciate A Housecoat, Smoking Jacket, Bath Robe or Lounge Robe As A Gift And especially so when he discovers that it came from a store that has for many years made a study of men's needs—THE GLOBE. House Coats or ! Bath Robes, Ex- Lounge Robes Smoking Jackets ceptional Values Unusual Qualities Of fine quality double Blanket Robes in In- Smart inexpensive, as faced fabrics and velvets. dian Oriental and novelty well a * luxurious Mate- All elegantly tailored. designs; beautifully fin- lassc * llk Robes—for the ished. u ' tr a dresser. $7.50 to $4O Men's, $8.50 and $9.50 *ci\ Boys', $5.00 and $6.50 *Plo to JfrOU . Fancy Vests Fur Collars Leathertex Coats Of Velvets. ICnit I-abHcs An attached Fur Col- Some of them reversible' and fancy Worsted effects [ar for M en ' s Overcoats— on smart English Tweeds and Evening Dress Vests. Sealinc> Nutfia Beayer and Knitted Heather ' $6.50 to $9.50 and Hudson Seal - Mixtures. 517.50 to $6O $3O to $5O Holeproof Silk rZ~. Hoge ] Patrick Raincoats Mackinaws Smartly styled double In black, navy, cordovan, . texture cloths, Tweeds, gun metal. Everyman Sold under the I atrick Unfinished Worsteds and needs them—no one ever J i . 1 Suede cloth : absolutely has enough. Mackinaws ever guaranteed . Uie,y $l.OO $2O to $25 $12.50 to $45 THE GLOBE TUESDAY EVENING, Ito discuss possibilities of closer af i filiation and mutual helpfulness in I the great reorganization work that 11 is before the Lutheran Church, if the ! conference is held. It is believed that j it will be one of the most significant ! gatherings in the history of Prot ! | cstantism. It will represent a group of more than 75,000,000 Protestants, • more than half of the whole Prot ' estnnt membership powers in the I world. This group heretofore has I been largely limited to national or -11 ganization and activity, i The meeting of the council was ! called for the purpose of discussing I the needs of the Lutheran Church ,ln Europe, on the basis of the reports |of the five commissioners just re j turned from Europe. ; Dr. ,T. A. Morehead, president of j Roanoke College and chairman of 1 the commission, presented the report of the commissioners. He said that . 1 Mr. Hoover was utterly wrong in his I estimate of the food conditions in I'Central Europe. The suffering in Central Europe is great and it will necessitate a great deal of help from America to prevent millions of peo ple from starving. Dig (liangcs In Germany Of the church situation in Ger many, he said, that the old customs of organization are existing, but that radical changes are under way, and that it will take years of organizing before the church is finally estab lished on a free basis and that the ! Lutheran Church in America will I have to guide the Lutheran Church I in Germany. I The attitude of the present pollti ! cal parties is not hostile to the church, owing to the condition of the j central party with the socialists. But ! there is an indication that this coali- I tion will not last, there may be a I radical change in the political align- I ment which will create great diffi culties. The commissioners to Europe recommend that $5,000,000 be raised by the Lutheran Church of America within the next year, to meet the needs of the Lutheran Church in Europe: Among the needs are the establishment of theological scml | narles In such countries that are left I without seminaries through the re assignment of territory by the Peace Conference. Churches must be re- I built, where the war has destroyed them. In Poland it is estimated that | $10,000,000 of Lutheran Church i property has been destroyed. Many I pastors must be supported. Especi | ally in the eastern countries, church j life has been utterly deranged. Great ; groups of Lutherans are entirely ' without pastors. The pastors hav ! ing been killed by the revolution or I driven out. Charitable agencies must be supported whose Income has been reduced beyond a point where it can meet the situation. To Return to Euro pi- After considerable discussion the National Lutheran Council decided that the Lutheran's of America should stand by the program of the European commissioners and to con tinue the work of reconstruction of the church in Europe, as begun by the commissioners. As the tlrst step it was decided to raise at least $l,- 500,000 to meet the immediate need. Dr. Morehead and M. J. Stoles, of St. Paul, were requested to return as quickly as possible to Europe to con tinue the work. Prof. Stolee has been for the better part of a year in the service of the National Luth eran Council in Europe. He return ed in September to bring In person the appeal for immediate relief to the.Lutherans in Poland. The relief committee appointed for the relief in Poland reported that at present more than 1,000 bales of clohing are on he waters, that three warehouses in New York are filled with additional clothing that is being shipped as fast as shipping space becomes available. SOLDIER LEAVES HOSPITAL Carlisle, Pa., Dec. 23. Clayton Kauffman, a Company G soldier, has been discharged from Carlisle hos pital, where he underwent an op eration for the removal of pieces of shrapnel and is now at his home in Boiling Springs. Use McNeil's Pain Exterminator —Ad AJj To Help Make HIV Strong, Keen I Red-Blooded IV Americans jfofn SSjfev Being used by over three iffuft.Tn'dEiEML million people annually. I' *'' l increase the strength of weak. a nervous, run • down J folks in two weeks time in many In *-~^!^9Hr^Bl3 stanccs - Ask your doctor or druggist HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH TELLS HOW TO MAKE $50,000 A YEAR; IT'S EASY, TRY IT Ixuulon, Dec. 23.—Most healthy I men und women are potential earn , era of f 10,000 a year, according to F. Higham, member of I'arlia ; ment. Mr. Higham recently told j members of the efficiency club how I to earn this big Income. 1 "Ten thousand a year men never I write asking for a position," he de | clared. "The secret of how to ob j tain large incomes Is to get others I to work out your ideas, to have the .courage of your convictions, to be able to say 'yes' or 'no' on the instant I and to stick to your decision. Men i who can make up their own minds and make up other people's minds are so few that only these get £lO,- 000 a year or more In business." Most men and women, he said, wait for opportunity to knock at the door and when it does they are usually too tired to get up. Oppor tunities are made. They rarely seek one out. If people want to earn £lO,OOO they make up their minds to get it and let nothing stand in their way. If it is worth having it is worth fighting for. Few £lO,OOO-a-year-men are really happy men, said the speaker. They have that terrible discontent that is never satisfied. The man who thinks he can earn £lO,OOO a year should decide whether, he really wants it. He will not get it if he does not make up his mind, and one day, when he gets it, he will probably re gret it. A man should never envy the successful, but emulate them. He should show to his employers an infinite capacity for taking pains and be ready for any question or emergency. "Be careful of your personal ap pearance," he proceeded. "Look prosperous, act prosperous, be an optimist. Pessimists never get far. Be kind; that is a great virtue. Be courteous. It is the cheapest thing in the world and being so easy to do most people don't do it. Never break your word. The business TRAIN STOPPING MERE INCIDENT Compensation Board Makes an Unusual Ruling in Inter- State Commerce Cases The State Com \\\ has upheld the de f feree in Lower vs. B22*HSyjt*Wl Beaver Co. case, 11 -fSMWraWmr that * hon a train ffl** SI state commerce is stopped and an ac cident to an em ploye occurs the fact that the train was halted does not take It out jf the inter-state commerce activity. Under Federal decisions no compen sation can be granted when an em ploye is hurt while engaged in inter state traffic. "The mere fact that the train was halted for a time and was not actually in motion Is imma terial and it is also immaterial that the injury was caused by something foreign to the actual movement of the train" says the decision, which holds that "the whole transaction was stamped as an inter-state activity." In Lower vs. Reading, a Philadel phia case, it is held that switching Is also incidental to inter-state com merce and that there can be no award "for death or injury occur ring in such an operation. Because the claimant was dismiss ed from his place, to which he had been reassigned after being injured and found able to work, for causes other than inability to do the work required the Board orders the com pensation agreement ended and re fuses to re-open the case. In Sip pie vs. Lackawanna railroad. It is stated that the claimant absented himself from his post without leave in working hours. In Critchlow vs. Steen, Renfrew, the Board awards the claimant, a tool dresser, compensation to cover half the difference between what he earned before an accident and what he is now making on a farm. In Thomas vs. Lackawanna Railroad, Scranton, it is held that the hus band of the claimant died from apo plexy and not from accident. Suits against dealers selling flour declared to have been bleached by the use of chemicals have been ord ered brought by State Dairy and Food Commissioner James Foust as the result of analyses made of flour I by James A. Evans, of Erie, one of the State chemists. Wholesale pur chases of flour sold in Pennsylvania have been made by General Agent W. F. Hill, of Huntingdon, follow ing complaints about flour and charges that it is being whitened by artificial means." Commissioner Foust districted the State for the purchase of samples and almost ev ery brand and grade that is com monly used was bought under Mr. Hill's direction and analyses prom ptly made. "There are two objec tions to the sale of chemically bleached flour, one being the decep tion on the public and the other that it exposes the consumer to risks," said Mr. Foust. "An interior grade of flour is made to appear like the better grade, so much so that it takes chemical analysis to determine the extent. If the average consumer knew what chemicals were used he would shun the danger. State laws are very specific in regard to use of such flours. Chemical bleaching is as bad as embalming food." The Egan-Rogers Stool nncl Iron Co., Chester, has filed notice of in crease of stock from $lOO,OOO to $111,300; Tate, Jones & Co., Pitts burgh. debt, $100,000; G. C. Mur phy Co., Pittsburgh, stock, $lOO,- 000 to $500,000; Vera Co., Washing ton, stock, $16,200 to $50,000. Fines of $lOO will be imposed upon persons who kill beaver in Pennsyl vania according to Btate Game Com mission officials. The State is buy ing over 150 beaver in Canada to re establish the animals and there are now colonies In three counties. The others will be received during the winter and preparations are being made to distribute them where they can be protected. Elk are now also protected in Pennsylvania. Owing to the high prices bid for construction of sections of State highway on which tenders were opened last week, the State Highway Department will likely reject sev eral and ask new bids next year. The question whether the Public Service Commission has authority to sit on objections to a new rate declared to have been made as a conservation measure was raised before the Public Service Commis sion yesterday l-n the protests of the cities of Erie and Corry to the new schedule of the Pennsylvania Gas Co. The company's counsel claimed that the advance in rates was In re- I world is ever on the lookout for re liable men. "Sack yourself from the job that does not make you happy to perform it. No man ever got on if he be moaned the fate that placed him in 'that business.' You must take chances if you want big prizes. Have faith in yourself or no one else wtll. i The world Judges you by what you can and do —not by what you say you can do. "The greatest business task in the world," he concluded, "Is the or ganization and development of the British Empire. It 3 managing di rector, David Lloyd George, consid- I erltig his great capacity, energy, I vision, and decision, is the poorest I paid managing director in the world. IHe needs a dozen £lO,OOO a year | men to help him. But the state also ! limits his authority for paying for I brains to a few thousand a year. His i Minister of Labor, one of the most [ competenjt men in the kingdom, gets | a paltry £2,000 a year—a first-class man on a third-class income. The state must learn to pay its public servants better. "Directors of great corporations need a new point of view also. Throughout the country directors getting fees of 500 pounds a year spend many wasted hours seeing how they can avoid paying a man £lO,OOO a year to run the business I while they waste £lO,OOO a month 1 for the shareholders while they de bate the point. Directors of limited liability companies have still much to learn. And so has labor as a whole. "No man who works eight hours a day for a minimum wage will ever earn £lO,OOO a year. The labor lead ers are working day and night try ing to get shorter hours for those who labor. And they are poorly | paid for their work also. (J. H. Thomas, president of the National [Union of Railway Men) also is worth I £lO,OOO a year." ality a conservation measure be cause it would tend to keep down large consumption of natural gas. The case was given a series of hear ings and is part of a series of gas complaints which have been the grounds for an extensive investiga tion by the Commission. When the residents of Gordonvtlle through C. W. Eby contended that the Pennsyl vania Railroad did not provide shel ter or crossing facilities for its east bound passengers, but only for the west-bound counsel for the company declared that It was without funds to make improvements. Members of the Commission expressed some doubts on that score. live Philadelphia Building and loan associations have filed notices of Increase in stock. The Vicl, Mas ter. Irving and German Enterprises have advanced from one to three millions and the members from two ■to five millions. It Is a rniv between new Infantry companies in Philadelphia and the old Fourth and Sixth Regiment terri tory for the first company to receive Federal recognition Recruiting is actively under way in a dozen cities now. Eject Sinn Feiners From Jersey Church Jersey City, N. J., Dec. 23.—Police ejected 43 men and women Sinn Fein sympathizers from the Second Pres byterian Qhurch here last night when they tried to break up an anti-Sinn Fein meeting. The intruders waved an Irish flag and shouted: "Three cheers for Ireland!" Daylight Saving Wins in Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, Dec. 23. The city council passed the daylight saving ordinance whclh provides that on May 1 the clocks in Pittsburgh shall be turned ahead one hour and on October I moved bac kan hour. COME HOME FOR HOLIDAYS Maryavllle, Pa„ Dec. 23.—Marysville students who hove arrived home to spend their holiday vacations at the homes of their parents include Miss Mary Reighard. Walter W. White, Joe K. Lightner. James Benfer, Lewis Piatt and James Bell, students at Pennsylvania State College; Watson Hippie, a freshman at Ohio Northern University. Ada, Ohio; Miss Grace Pewterbaugh. a sophomore at Al bright College; Howard Adams, a student at the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy; Cletua Carson, a student at Albright College. TO RAISE lIACIMi PIGEON'S Columbia* Pa., Dec. 23.—The rolirn bia Branch .f (he American Racing Pigeon Union has been reorganized In re with William R. Rrconic, presi dent and Daniel C. Rcttew, secretary. There are eight member:) in tile local branch and they will raise bird.) for next year's rt.cfng contests. As Influensii Is an exaggerated form of Grip. LAX ATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets should be taken In larger doses than Is prescribed for ordinary Grip. A I good plan is not to wait until you are I sick, but PREVENT IT by taking | LAXATIVE BItOMO QUININE Tnh- I lets In time.—Adv. Kelley's Coal For A Merry Xmas A COMFORTABLE home, Christmas Day, j is much to be desired, es-i pecially if the weather is extremely cold, and that! which will contribute most! satisfactorily to properly | heated rooms is Kelley's j "Blue Ribbon" Coal—than! which no richer, cleaner' coal is mined. Be sure to have enough in your bins for Christmas and the other days of Win ter. H. M. Kelley & Co. IN. 3rd St. 10th and State Sts. Fisher Comments oil the Fiduciaries In his review of the business of the State Banking Department for 1918, the year before he assumed of fice, State Banking Commissioner John S. Fisher has this to say übout fiduciaries: "One of the effects of the Federal Law has been to lead a number of the states, including our own Com monwealth, to grant fiduciary pow ers to State banks. Both National and State banks possess only a lim ited charter existence. I am firmly convinced that no corporation should act as a fiduciary unless it possesses a perpetual charter. If banks are to be permitted to con tinue to exercise fiduciary powers, they should be granted perpetual charters. Otherwise there should be restrictive legislation limiting the appointment of fiduciaries to such corporations as by their perpetual existence are qualified to administer trusts without the danger of having their charters terminated by limi tation. "Another feature of this subject which deserves attention arises from the fact that, both by the Fed eral Act and the State Law, the power of this department over a Na tional bank engaged in the fiduciary business is limited to the 'assets so employed. It is self-evident that the responsibility of the fiduciary necessarily depends upon its capital, surplus and other assets. It there fore follows that if the National !v\ are to Permitted to invade this field of business which, as the supreme Court holds," is peculiarly within State administrative control, they should be required, as a con dition precedent, to submit their en tire business to the inspection of the State authorities." Food Prices Drop Where the Committees Keep Watch, It Is Said Philadelphia. Dee. 23.—Federal officials asert food costs have come down in every state where fair-price committees are actively at work. In Maryland the food commissioner has reported a reduction In the price of 113 out of 118 food commodities, and on Increase in only two, since the campaign was started in August. The decreases in Maryland ranged from 2 to 33 per cent, officials here assert. They declare similar results have been obtained in Ohio, New York and other states Wordering on Penn sylvania and cite these results as illustrating what might be accomp lished here with the co-operation of local authorities. In an interview Governor Sproul made it clear he believed increased production would solve the high cost problem quicker than would govern mental regulation and supervision. "What we may look for in the future depends on increased produc tion and economy," he asserted. "This may be said of the entire food situation. If wo return to some of the good old-fashioned ideas of economy, we will quicken the re turn of lower prices." WAS OPERATED ON HERE Sliippensburg, Pa., Dec. 23.—Wil liam Wolf, 10-year-old son of Wil liam Wolf, of this place, is dead at his home here. The lad underwent an operation about four weeks ago at the Harrisburg Hospital. He is survived by his parents; three brothers. Itay, Elwood and John, and one sister, Helen. | Last Call | | For Christmas— * H Order At Once || From Your Nearest Dealer J I OvNJ* * , UVVM ||2 " . . ill If you can not get in touch with the dealer nearest your home jj||j telephone 77 and we will see to it that you will be served with Hershey's Superior Ice Cream for Christmas. But you must get <^> your order in early, because the demand is bigger than the supply. jf§| All Flavors jj^l | HERSHEY CREAMERY CO. | jjj HARRISBURG, PA. DECEMBER 23, 1919. Stork Is Busy in Perry County Town MnryavUle, Pa., Dec. 23.—The stork has been kind to Marysvllle residents recently, no less than five visits being reported. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Robin son announce of a son on Thursday, December 18; Mr. and Mrs. Harry Null, Lincoln street, announce the birth of a daughter on Wednes day. December 17: Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus Hoover, South Main street, an nounce the birth of a son on Wednes day, December 17; Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Heishley, Front street, announce the birth of a son on Sunday. December 14; Mr. and Mrs. Knos Good announce I the birth of a daughter on Wednes day, December 10. STUDENTS GIVE PI.AY | Mnrysvllle, Pa.. Dec. 23.—Students 10l Oak Grove school last evening gave their annual Christmas enter tainment in the Oak Grove school. | Included on the program were read ings. musical selections and recita tions. The feature of the evening's program was a playlet, "Her One Pro- I posal." POSLAM SHOWS ! YOU THAT YOUR I SKIN WILL HEAL You have no idea, unless you have [ actually seen its work, how speedy and dependable Poslani is and how it will justify, lime and again, all the I confidence you place in it—to better those troublesome, irritating, itching j conditions that cause discomfort. When Eczema breaks out, disfig ( uring Pimples, Rash or any erup tional troubles, Poslain should be ! used to drive them away for just a little of it will go so far, do so much j and last so long. | Sold everywhere. For free sample write to Emergency Laboratories, 213 West 47th St., New York City. Urge your skin to become clearer, brighter, better, through the daily use of Poslii'n Sonp, medicated witli Poslam. | Christmas Toys For the Kiddies i Shop Uptown and Save Money i: * ' ij I Tree Lights Electric Trains A Pocket Knives Motors j^SmSSKi Search Lights Safety Razors wSEE&BSsiS&i Sleds Toys, all kinds IHHPIMS||B 1 ! Wagons Skates You will be surprised at our llllllllll